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New Tail Light Taillight Taillamp Brakelight Lamp Driver Left Side 525 540 Lh on 2040-parts.com

US $123.41
Location:

48 States Only, United States, US

48 States Only, United States, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:60 Days Return policy details:We will send you a replacement part or refund you the purchase price if you received a defective part, a part that was damaged in transit, a part is missing, or you received the wrong part. Please be prepared to send back the part you did receive. We will pay for the return shipping cost by emailing you a pre-paid shipping label with instructions for returning the part. Return shipping will be paid by:Seller Restocking Fee:No Warranty:Yes Part Brand:Replacement Placement on Vehicle:Left

Tail Lights for Sale

Dodge debuts new emblem

Mon, 24 May 2010

With Ram and Dodge going their separate ways, the Ram brand is keeping the distinctive ram's horns logo that adorned Dodge vehicles. That left the Dodge brand to search for a new symbol as it tries to reinvent itself as a sporty, youth-oriented brand -- without pickups. So Dodge CEO Ralph Gilles adopted the twin red slashes of Chrysler Group's performance cars, seen on SRTs and R/T models.

Ford B-Max set for Geneva 2011

Fri, 10 Dec 2010

The Ford B-Max crossover, based on the Iosis Concept (pictured), will debut at Geneva 2011 The Ford Fusion arrived in 2002 as a stretched version of the Ford Fiesta – a mini MPV. And for a while it did pretty well in the sales charts, reaching a peak in 2007 as second only to Vauxhall’s Meriva. But its slide since then has been significant and last year it languished in fifth place with sales of 30,000.

Shelby 1000 Mustang: A completely bonkers dose of American Muscle Car

Wed, 28 Mar 2012

Shelby 1000 Mustang Shelby has taken the Ford Mustang GT500 and given it up to 1085bhp to create the Shelby 1000. But it’ll cost you the best part of £150k. Fifty years ago Caroll Shelby changed UK motorways forever by teaming up with AC to produce the AC Cobra which, it is said, was responsible for Barbara Castle introducing the 70mph speed limits on motorways after AC used the new M1 to test the AC Cobra at speeds of up to 180mph.